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Indeed, a revolution of great magnitude is developing
today, but at the molecular or microscopic levelÉ Molecular revolution
develops in relatively unknown areas.
Felix Guattari
The articles in this volume chart movements and tactics
and question the various ways we work as activists, media-makers and people
who want to make change. They are report-backs on some of the supremely
diverse range of idea-tools people are currently using for this purpose.
Not all of them agree with each other, just like we in the collective
sometimes don't; we think this is a positive and vital element of encouraging
what Felix Guattari calls a 'molecular revolution'. We are all engaged
in different, autonomous sites of struggle. Each has value.
It feels important to give a short history of the
moment into which Rogue States erupts. A week ago, three activists in
Gothenburg, Sweden, were shot during demonstrations against the European
Union meeting. This is the first time we've seen police fire on so-called
'anti-globalisation' protestors. We are at a point where the usefulness
of 'summit-hopping' is being questioned from both inside and outside the
movement. It seems clear that continued mass mobilisations are still important
for a variety of reasons, not least the social bonding and exchange of
ideas that results from so many geographically dispersed groups converging
on the same point at the same time. They have also acted as one catalyst
for the growth of independent media outlets. But they are not the only
forms of resistance available.
'Media' itself is now almost indistinguishable from
the entire gamut of resistance tactics: from spraycan interventions on
city walls, to indigenous uprisings in Mexico and Brazil, to 'art', to
the simple act of conversation. But we need to think about whether these
tactics need to be heading towards approximately the same space, and if
so, what that space would be. It might seem obvious that our goal is a
more sustainable planet where the people are responsible for their own
affairs, where the livelihood and well-being of all the peopleno
matter where they come fromtakes priority over the profits of a
few. But if one thing has become clear, it's that 'the obvious' is no
longer a reliable tool of thought, if it ever was. This is one of the
many points on which members of the collective have disagreed.
As everyone 'becomes' the media, we still need to
watch constantly where the power flows, who has it, and whether what we're
doing is useful. When everything we do is at risk of constant commodification
and misrepresentation by the corporate machine, it's even more important
to interrogate and openly articulate who 'we' are. Rogue States is one
such attempt.
Welcome to Rogue States, the Media Circus 2001 Reader.
In the following pages you will find how-to guides, contacts for groups,
articles, essays and a program guide for Media Circus 2001.
So, who are we then? And how did Rogue States come
about?
A small collective of volunteers has organised Media
Circus and Rogue States. We are interested in fostering a strong progressive
and critical media culture and come from various places but are currently
based in Melbourne. Our past and current involvements cover a broad range
of media and cultural practice and activism, including melbourne.indymedia,
S11 protests, National Young Writers Festival, exploring the sociology
of activism, investigating surveillance, organising screenings and events,
and facilitating email lists. We are students, academics, media makers,
writers and people wanting to create a more sustainable future. Some of
us do stuff with SKA TV, Voiceworks, Radio 3CR, Friends of the Earth and
The Paper. Some of our names are Nik Beuret, Marni Cordell, Sam de Silva,
Aizura Hankin, Alex Kelly, Rachel Maher, Lachlan Simpson, Shane McGrath
and Karen Eliot.
We began the process of making this publication about
eight weeks ago in a meeting, when someone said, 'What about the Media
Circus program?' At first it was just an A5 booklet, maybe 20 pages. Then,
suddenly, we were emailing everyone we knew (and lots of people we didn't)
to ask for submissions, and it had grown exponentially into what you see
here.
Selection of articles was managed through loose consensus;
we read everything and the pieces that more or less everyone liked, or
that a few people felt strongly about, got in. We also tried to solicit
articles; but in a time frame of four weeks from calling for submissions
to beginning editing, what we ended up with was what we published. The
point is, anyone can do thisand you should. Some of us have previous
experience in editing print media; some of us don't. All of us have learnt
a lot in eight weeks.
We hope you like it.
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